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DA Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) Briefing Retirement Services Office March 2014

DA Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) Briefing Retirement Services Office March 2014. UNCLASSIFIED. Our Goal. CHANGE.... MISINFORMATION you may have heard about SBP from MISINFORMED People INTO..... INFORMATION From INFORMED Experts. Purpose.

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DA Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) Briefing Retirement Services Office March 2014

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  1. DA Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) Briefing Retirement Services OfficeMarch 2014 UNCLASSIFIED

  2. Our Goal CHANGE.... MISINFORMATION you may have heard about SBP from MISINFORMED People INTO..... INFORMATION From INFORMED Experts

  3. Purpose This briefing will break SBP down into manageable understandable blocks, to help you to make an informed decision on your individual SBP election.

  4. THE BOTTOM LINERETIRED PAY STOPS WITH THE DEATH OF THE RETIREE!

  5. WHAT IS SBP? • Enacted by Congress in 1972 • Sole means for retiree to continue a portion of retired pay to survivors • Coverage is free while on active duty • Decision at retirement -- begin to share cost • Over eight out of ten retiring Soldiers elect SBP to protect their family’s financial future

  6. Base Amount • amount of retired pay (in dollars) participation is based on • minimum, by law = $300 • maximum, by law = full retired pay • may choose any $$ amount between • Soldiers retiring under CSB/REDUX may choose full base amount based on retired pay they would have received under High-3.

  7. The Annuity Amount: Annuity of 55% of selected base amount regardless of the annuitants age

  8. ABOUT ELECTIONS • Must be made before retirement • Certain elections need spouse concurrence • Generally irrevocable • -- may be cancelled with spouse concurrence between months 25-36 following retirement • For non-regular Reserve retirement ( Age-60), only Reservists who elected RCSBP election Option A, Decline RCSBP

  9. A “JOINT” Decision For Married Soldiers Who . . . • decline coverage • cover less than full retired pay • elect “child only” • are under REDUX retirement plan and do not elect full base amount based on retired pay they would have received under High-3 It is the Soldier’s election • The spouse can only concur or non concur

  10. Termination Feature termination during one-time, one-year window between 25th and 36th mo. after start of pay spouse concurrence required barred from future enrollment no refund of past premiums why the law change? --acknowledges need for flexibility

  11. Six Election Categories Spouse Only Spouse & Child Child Only Former Spouse Only FS & Child Insurable Interest

  12. Spouse Election provides annuity of 55% regardless of the surviving spouse’s age annuity paid forever (unless remarriage occurs pre-55) if remarriage ends, annuity reinstated increased by annual COLA taxable as an annuity cost stops when no beneficiary

  13. Spouse & Child Election spouse = primary beneficiary children are secondary beneficiary and receive the annuity onlyif spouse can’t (pre-55 remarriage or death) and they are still eligible child cost is based on ages of member, spouse & youngest child cost of child coverage - very low child cost stops when no eligible children remain

  14. Child OnlyElection • eligible until 18, or 22 if full-time, unmarried student • unmarried incapacitated child - eligible forever • (if condition was incurred pre-18 or 22) • Note: It is recommended that you research the impact SBP for a fully disabled child may have on other benefits the child has or will receive. • cost based on ages of member & youngest child • all eligible children covered at one cost • cost stops when no eligible children remain • cheaper than “spouse” due to finite benefit • costlier option than child when with spouse since child is primary beneficiary • annuity divided equally among all eligible children

  15. Advice--Seriously Consider Child Coverage! Q: Why bother to cover my 21-year old son who graduates from college soon? A: Because.... incapacitation may occur while still eligible “closing” the child category when there are eligible children closes it forever family complete? perhaps a step-, grand-, foster- or natural child is in your future Cost stops when no eligible children remain

  16. “Insurable Interest” Election Who Can Elect: unmarried Soldiers with no or one dependent child Eligible Beneficiaries: relative more closely related than cousin; or business associate w/financial interest in Soldier (proof needed) Base Amount: Must be full retired pay Cost: 10% + 5% for each full 5 yrs younger beneficiary is than Soldier (maximum 40%) Benefit: 55% of retired pay less SBP cost Loss of Beneficiary: May elect new beneficiary within 180 days of current beneficiary’s death. In order for an Insurable Interest election for a medically retired Soldier to be valid, they must live one year from retirement or if they die within one year, death must not be attributable to a medical condition for which they were medically retired.

  17. Former Spouse (FS) “Particulars” Former spouse SBP coverage can be: purely voluntary incorporated into a written agreement court-ordered If divorce prior to retirement: If court ordered, Soldier should elect former spouse at retirement or could be held in contempt of court Former spouse can provide DFAS-CL divorce decree with subsequent court orders plus a DD Form 2656-10 (Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP)/Reserve Component (RC) SBP Request for Deemed Election) within one year of the court order first awarding former spouse SBP FS coverage can be changed if court order is amended or vacated by former spouse’s death

  18. No Beneficiary at Retirement? Keep SBP literature Keep “Echoes” -- RSOs’ ph. nos. listed Contact nearest RSO for a new briefing as soon as eligible beneficiary is gained Decision whether or not to enroll new family members MUST be made within one year of gaining them New spouse becomes eligible at 1-year anniversary. (SBP costs do not begin until then)

  19. SBP Cost Formula (Spouse Only) Formula: - 6.5% of base amount selected - cost lowered in Mar ‘90 Examples: Base Amount: $2000 $3000 $4000 Cost (6.5%) $ 130 $ 195 $ 260 Annuity provided: $1100 $1650 $2200

  20. Sample SBP Costs (Ages: Member=44; Spouse=41; Youngest Child=12) Monthly Cost Base Spouse Spouse Child Annuity Amount Only & Child Only Amount - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $4000 $260 $260.52 $ 8.00 $2200 $3000 $195 $195.39 $ 6.00 $1650 $2000 $130 $130.26 $ 4.00 $1100

  21. “Threshold”Amount Portion of base amount which costs 2.5% Only applies to Soldiers whose Date Initially Entered Military Service (DIEMS) date was prior to 1 Mar 90, medical retirements, or reserve non-regular age 60 retirement. Indexed annually to AD pay raise(s) Instead of a $300 base, cover base amount at 2.5% Effective 1 Jan 14 BaseCostAnnuity Threshold $768 $19.20 $422 Minimum $300 $ 7.50 $165 Difference $468 $11.70 $257

  22. Can I Tailor SBP To Meet My Needs? Yes....Think “Base Amount” Challenge: What base amount should I cover to meet our needs? Solution: Divide the goal amount by 55% Examples: $2000 annuity -- choose $3636 as base $1000 annuity -- choose $1818 as base

  23. “30-Year Paid-Up Provision” effective 1 Oct 2008 no further cost (but annuity payable) AFTER... 30 years of paying SBP Premiums (360 payments)… AND reaching age 70

  24. Five Main Points When Comparing SBP to Life Insurance • It takes a surprising amount of insurance to do for the spouse what SBP will (based on averages). • It will take a lot moreinsurance if the spouse outlives the retiree by the longest period of time. • The amount of insurance needed over time rises due to inflation. • Even though insurance may appear to be an inexpensive “alternative” at retirement, it’s harder to obtain and increasingly expensive as you age. • If retired for disability, insurance may be very expensive or even impossible to obtain due to existing medical conditions

  25. Replacement Value of Annuity Ret. Pay: $3000 Member’s Age: 42 Spouse’s Age: 41 Spouse’s Annual After-Tax Replacement Age at Death SBP Benefit Value of SBP* 43 $17,820 $433,516 51 $23,949 $598,904 61 $32,185 $635,844 71 $43,254 $614,876 81 $58,130 $513,003 *Face value of insurance needed to equal SBP benefit. Note: This program can be accessed on the DOD Actuary homepage, www.dod.mil/actuary/

  26. SBP Cost of Living Adjustments (COLA) • The effects of COLA on SBP over 40 years for a SFC with a $2,400 SBP base amount, yearly annuity is $15,840 in 2012. Yearly SBP Annuity $153,704 $122,725 $50,166 $15,840 10 Yrs 20 Yrs 30 Yrs 40Yrs You pay in today’s dollars for an SBP annuity paid in future dollars* • 3% COLA represents current average inflation • 5.39% COLArepresents inflation average over previous 40 years • 6% COLA represents moderate inflation All calculations made using DOD Office of the Actuary tables ** SOURCE: US Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics

  27. Years Required for Annuity to Exceed Premiums Paid for Spouse SBP Length of timeYears for Annuity to Premiums Paid Exceed Premiums Paid 5 Years 8 Months 10 Years 1 Year, 1 Months 15 Years 1 Year, 6 Months 20 Years 1 Year, 10 Months 25 Years 2 Years, 2 Months *30 Years 2 Years, 5 Months *No further cost after 360 (30 years) premium payments and age 70) (Based on data provided by the DOD Actuary Office)

  28. Medical Retirement SBP Considerations • Soldiers being medically retired need to consider the following in their SBP decision • SBP and Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC) • Special Survivor Indemnity Allowance (SSIA) • SBP coverage for survivors, if VA determines death is not service connected and DIC is not payable • Withdrawal from SBP based on a VA Total Disability Rating

  29. SBP and Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC) • SBP and DIC • DIC is a tax free annuity payable to survivors only if retiree’s death is determined by the VA to be service connected • SBP provides annuity if death is not determined to be service connected • Spouse SBP is offset dollar for dollar by DIC currently • SBP premiums are refunded to the spouse for any portion of SBP that is offset by DIC • Surviving spouse receives any portion of SBP that exceeds DIC • Based on a court case, a surviving spouse authorized both SBP and DIC will receive both if remarried after age 57

  30. Special Survivor Indemnity Allowance (SSIA) • SSIA is only paid to surviving spouses whose SBP annuity is fully or partially offset by DIC. • SSIA will be paid to the surviving spouse if: • Receiving DIC • Receiving an SBP annuity either partially or completely offset by DIC • SBP offset by DIC is at least equal to the SSIA • Payments will be paid in the following monthly amounts: • 2014, $150; 2015, $200; 2016, $275; 2017, $310 • Ends 1 Oct 2017 unless extended by Congress

  31. Withdrawal from SBP Based on VA Total Disability Rating • You may withdraw from SBP, if you have a service-connected disability that has been rated by the VA as totally disabling for not less than five continuous years from the date of retirement --or– if awarded after retirement for ten or more continuous years. • Withdrawal is allowed because surviving spouse will qualify for DIC benefits because VA will presume death is service-connected • SBP provides coverage for survivors when death not service connected • When a retiree who withdrew for total disability dies and VA verifies DIC will be paid, the surviving spouse receives a full refund of all SBP costs paid for portion of SBP offset by DIC • Note: If not rated by VA as totally disabled for the above timeframes, there is no guarantee VA will determine death is service connected and your survivors will receive DIC.

  32. Payment of SBP Cost when Retired Pay is Completely Offset by VA Disability Pay • If your VA disability compensation completely offsets your retired pay, there is no automatic deduction of monthly SBP premiums • Unpaid SBP premiums carried over into a new billing month will accrue a six (6) percent interest fee • By submitting a DD Form 2891 (Authorization For RSFPP and or SBP Costs Deductions) to your servicing VA office, you can authorize VA to deduct your SBP premiums from your VA disability compensation and pay directly to the Defense Finance and Accounting Service or you can also pay SBP premiums by direct payment to the following address: Defense Finance and Accounting Service DFAS-CL, SBP and RSFPP Remittance P.O. Box 979013 St. Louis, MO 63197-9013 • Do not submit an SBP premium direct payment or by submitting a DD Form 2891 to VA until DFAS provides a Retired Account Statement (RAS) informing you that your retired pay is offset by VA disability DD Form 2891

  33. SBP POSITIVES • Government-subsidized plan • Tax-free premiums • Inflation-adjusted annuity • Level-term plan annuity of 55 percent • Age, health, smoking, sex, lifestyle -- not considered • Flexible: can terminate between ret years 2-3 • “Paid-up” after 30 years paying premiums + age 70 • Survivors cannot outlive annuity • Cost in today’s dollars; benefit in tomorrow’s dollars • Can only be changed by Congress • Income safety net; peace of mind • Every active duty Soldier enrolled at no cost from Day One

  34. Life’s Certainties?Civilians: 1--death2--taxes Retirees: 3--Can’t outlive retired pay Annuitants: 4--Can’t outlive SBP annuity

  35. For More SBP Information…. Log on to: http://www.armyg1. army.mil/retire Contact: your nearest Retirement Services Officer (RSO)

  36. REMEMBERRETIRED PAY STOPS WITH THE DEATH OF THE RETIREE!

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